* ''[[VideoGame/TwentyTwentySeven 2027]]'': Titan will reference this if you [[spoiler:initate the Vladmir ending.]]* In ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiStrangeJourney'', most of the humans and demons are mostly cool with each other. Humans from your investigation team tend to go somewhere between LawfulNeutral and TrueNeutral, and the demons swing in a true diverse fashion, with virtually all alignments represented. Then again, demons like Mitra appear. Turns out, Captain Jack and his all-too human pals are way, ''way'', '''''w[[RuleOfThree ay]]''''', too on par with Mitra for comfort, butchering demons (and by their willingness to torture and kill Jimenez, humans too) to create their own demon army. Especially when it turns out Jack and co. are OnlyInItForTheMoney.** ALL of the demons (or near all of them) are very quick to point out that while the Schwartzwelt is essentially a [[HellGate hell on earth]], all of it is modeled on humanity's being a race of bastards with the innate instinct and talent for killing (Especially killing other humans). The more wild/bloodthirsty demons clearly state how awed they are by that aspect of humanity with a grudging respect/obvious distaste.** After a while, having ''every single demon'' you try to negotiate with asking "Why do humans suck so much?" gets tiresome... (Though they also like to ask, "Nice suit! Where'd you get it?", so...)** A [[WildMassGuessing popular theory]] has it that the cosmic error which transformed God Almighty into [[GodIsEvil the uncaring bastard He is today]] exists because humans want a God that represents them (instead of, say, a caring and compassionate ruler). Considering [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve how powerful]] [[GodsNeedPrayerBadly human belief is in this setting]], this is a distinct possibility.* In the ''{{Mother}}'' series, the BigBad alien conquerer (Giygas) is usurped by his own henchman Porky, a local bully who lives next-door to the game's hero. Giygas, however, has become a casualty of his immense power. Rather than risk destroying the universe he seeks to rule, his incorporeal form in placed in a RestrainingBolt device which is guarded by Porky..... who promptly releases the lock once you deplete his HP. He would rather destroy all existence than lose to the hero.* ''VideoGame/{{Persona}}'' games gave us the AnthropomorphicPersonification of this trope in Nyarlathotep - an entity literally created as [[TheHeartless the dark, destructive side of the collective unconscious]], [[MadeOfEvil a monstrous entity born of Humanity's hatred, fear and despair]]. [[AsLongAsThereIsEvil He will exist as long as Humanity does]]. He has been known to [[OmnicidalManiac indulge in omnicidal plans]]... [[VideoGame/{{Persona2}} and he has been]] [[TheBadGuyWins known to win]].** Of course, He of the Thousand Masks takes his name from a Lovecraftian EldritchAbomination who just likes to mess with sapient life.** Though there is also Philemon, The Crawling Chaos' rival who believes humanity can become enlightened.*** Although Philemon himself may embody this trope even better than Nyarlathotep, in his own way -- you kinda expect the personified essence of humanity's evil to be a total asshole, but you don't quite expect his opposite to be the dick Philemon acts like.** The third and fourth games, however, focus on subverting this - the protagonists associate with those around them, discover the core of strength that lies at the heart of humanity, and use it to [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu smash in the face of an unGodly monstrosity]]. Heck, this is made ''explicit'' in ''Persona 4'', where the final boss [[spoiler:reveals she was using three people to test humanity - one representing despair, one representing destruction, and one representing hope. ''You'' were hope, and as you finish her off, she declares, "Children of man... Well done!"]]* Given how prevalent this trope is, it's worth noting that Konami's ''{{Suikoden}}'' series averts it--the kobolds are largely portrayed as personable, but elves and dwarves tend to be ''very'' arrogant and xenophobic, and although most of the villains have been humans, it seems to be because they're more numerous rather than because there's fewer bastards in other races.* A recurring theme in the ''{{Lunar}}'' series:** In ''VideoGame/LunarTheSilverStar'', the Goddess Althena finds that humans depend on her too much, and she decides to spread her power among them in order to [[spoiler:live as a regular human; in this case, it's Alex's VictoriousChildhoodFriend Luna]]. While she disliked the fact that they depended on her a good deal, she believes that [[HumansAreSpecial they can live fully without her and are capable of great things.]] Ghaleon believes in this trope in full force and thinks that humanity needs a god.** In ''VideoGame/LunarEternalBlue'', Zophar, [[GodOfEvil the god of destruction]], also believes in this. [[MysteriousWaif Lucia]] doesn't directly fall under this trope, but being an EmotionlessGirl who is a servant ([[EpilepticTrees or something]]) to Althena that is required to sleep on the abandoned Blue Star for thousands of years gives her the impression that Althena alone is the only one capable of keeping Lunar at peace and in line. CharacterDevelopment ensues as she adventures with [[TheHero Hiro]] and the others, and she, too, begins believing in [[HumansAreSpecial the opposite trope.]] [[spoiler:Even ''Ghaleon'', the former BigBad, returns realizing that the human strength that Alex had and that Hiro has are special.]]* Subverted in the ''VideoGame/{{Unreal}}'' series. Humans are bastards, sure, they run [[VideoGame/UnrealTournament bloody sport competitions]]... but the Skaarj, a race of violent, xenophobic, savage reptiloid BeePeople who believe all races besides Skaarj are inferior and exist solely to be reduced to slaves or wiped out for their amusement -- or both at once -- are bigger bastards by far.* While it doesn't have this theme ''per se'', the [[AllThereInTheManual racial backstory]] in ''DungeonSiege II'' doesn't exactly put humans in a positive light. It says that the human race has a dual nature, but it only mentions the negative, not the positive; it says that humans are [[BloodKnight extremely violent]].** To be fair, there's the Dryads. You'd think that a race of attractive plant girls who have an innate connection to nature would be some of the nicest people around, right? Guess again. Most Dryads are quite militaristic (more so in ''Broken World''), and are unusually suspicious of other races, especially the Half-Giants (though the Elf Amren seems to be on good terms with them). Plus there's that Ring of Submission they have, which senses your intentions before you've even thought of them and then [[AllCrimesAreEqual does painful or even fatal stuff to you accordingly]]. For a race that doesn't like government, that's a pretty fascistic way to treat your prisoners.*** Thankfully, there is an exception: Taar. She actually is one of the nicest people around and isn't all that fond of the Rings of Submission (which explains why she's glad to remove the player character's). In addition, since as of ''Broken World'', the Overmage is dead and peace is slowly but surely returning to Aranna, only time will tell if the other Dryads will also lay off the testosterone.* This happens a lot in ''VideoGame/{{StarCraft|I}}''. For example, Arcturus Mengsk is a MagnificentBastard at best and a Machiavellian despot at worst. Kerrigan is at first horrified when she's left behind, but when she gets turned into a Zerg, she actually ''[[EvilFeelsGood enjoys it]]''. Plus a lot of Terran missions revolve around CivilWarcraft. By the end of the ''VideoGame/{{StarCraft|I}}'' storyline, there's only one good Terran left among the notable ones: Jim Raynor. Thing is, there are only two other races and they are pretty much the same, give or take.** Or to be exact, the Zerg overmind desires to kill/infest the human colonists... and the Protoss attempt to stop this by burning the worlds... while the people are still on it. The Protoss burn them not because it's the only way or even the best way, but because they found humans distasteful but didn't have an excuse to remove them until the Zerg came along.** ''VideoGame/StarcraftII'' does a much better job of showing Terrans as a mostly good race, it highlights Acturus Mengsk's VillainWithGoodPublicity, while following the exploits of a force mostly made up of idealists. [[spoiler:The General that follows Valerian Mengsk is also willing to work with Raynor with no real objections.]] This is because the game is about how even when things look darkest, there is always the light of hope.** Furthermore, both ''Brood War'' and ''Starcraft II'' shows that humans and protoss at the very least are NotSoDifferent. The existence of a Dark Templar society and the Tal'Darim shows that the Protoss are just as prone to factionalism as the Terrans. Both races are slowly learning to distinguish friend from foe (The Khalai protoss respect Raynor's service to Aiur and skill as a commander, but still are hostile to the Dominion and the UED, while the Tal'Darim and the Dominion are hostile to all other factions, Terran and Protoss alike.)*** The books that introduced Arcturus's son Valerian show him as a pretty decent guy with a passion for history, while his father only focuses on the practical. About the only thing the father and son can talk about is Valerian's collection of antique swords, which Valerian sees as art and Arcturus sees as weapons. This is likely because he was mostly raised by his mother, while Arcturus was busy defeating the Confederacy and setting up his empire.* ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}}'' shows many humans who are pigheaded and prejudiced against races they view as "savage", and if a racist character shows up, it's more likely than not to be a human. But like other examples on this list, the other races in the world have their own prejudices and this was done to add some [[GrayingMorality Gray]] as the early games were mostly HumansAreSpecial vs AlwaysChaoticEvil.* [[TheFairFolk The fairies]] in the world of ''{{Drakengard}}'' subscribe to this viewpoint. The protagonist only ever meets two fairies, one of which is the king of fairies, and both of them, besides being [[SmallAnnoyingCreature annoying]], feel this way towards humans to the point of being racist. Humans are big, dumb, ugly, smelly, stinky idiots to the fairies who can never get anything right and always destroy the forests to feed their infernal greed. Caim's dragon is also of this prejudice, but then again, dragons being arrogant and looking down on humans has pretty much [[DeadHorseTrope been done to death.]]* ''VideoGame/ChronoCross'' [[{{Anvilicious}} doesn't beat around the bush about it]]. Ever. Particularly blatant when the planet brings a [[OrganicTechnology nature-based]] empire from a [[AlternateContinuity universe where the dinosaurs didn't go extinct]].** At least in this case the problem didn't seem to be blamed on humanity being evil, but that humans were heavily influenced and manipulated by [[EldritchAbomination Lavos]], who uplifted mankind to the top of the ecosystem for its own purposes: to eat it. ** They are also called out by the Dwarves who kill the faeries because humans accidentally poisoned their home. Clearly accidentally poisoning someone's living place is worse than actual genocide. Really the only people who has any right to call out humanity are the demihumans of Marbule as they never tried to kill anyone else.*** This gets especially jarring when the human heroes are misblamed by the fairies they just saved from the genocidal dwarves. Dwarves blaming humanity for their need to wipe out the fairies to settle on a pretty large island is already InsaneTrollLogic (especially if you consider that their GreenAesop is completely broken by the fact that they use smoking ''{{steampunk}} tanks''). The fairies pulling the Humans Are The Real Monsters card in front of their saviors, completely blaming the dwarven invasion on them instead of, you know, the dwarves however is completely mind-boggling.*** In ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'' every race got a chance to be a bastard, with the Reptites and Mystics waging wars in different time periods with the intent to wipe out humanity for ill-defined reasons. Even if humanity committed atrocities in the backstory that's a little extreme. The nature-based empire from ''Cross'' was the evolved form of the Reptites from ''Trigger'' which, to exist, likely killed off all the humans in their own timeline where Lavos never landed. Of course, it's humans that defeat Lavos and SaveTheWorld in the end (albeit with help from non-human allies.)* And that is not the only example to be found when it comes to the Franchise/TalesSeries. In fact, this is a major theme of ''VideoGame/TalesOfRebirth'' (along its FantasticRacism), but the message is not "humans are bastards" as much as it's "all people, Humas and Gajumas, are bastards period". They hate each other because they do, and both do pretty nasty things to each other (some Humas refused to give medicine to a Gajuma woman while she was dying ''in front of her daughter'', and some Gajumas chased an old couple out of town, forcing them to live in the middle of a desert filled with monsters). They get better... sort of. [[spoiler:The end of the game implies that they keep on being douches, but at least [[ThePowersThatBe the powers in command]] are doing something about it]].** Duke did have this view in ''VideoGame/TalesOfVesperia'', although the Krytians were ''just as'' guilty as humans were of summoning [[EldritchAbomination the Adephagos]]. And not ''all'' of the Entelexia were good, after all. ** In VideoGame/TalesOfTheAbyss, humans were bastards but only to the replicas - which all had an UncannyValley effect on the populace. (Well think about it...if someone who looked and sounded ''exactly'' like your dead friend showed up ''at your friend's funeral'', you probably would be a bit freaked out too!)** ''VideoGame/TalesOfLegendia'' uses something like this as a plot twist. There are two types of people on that world, Ferines, the people of the sea, and Oerines, the people of the land. The game highly drops a lot of hints that one of them wasn't exactly native to the world. Naturally, you assume after seeing the technology in The Legacy that [[spoiler:the Ferines weren't native]]. However, it's revealed in a surprise twist that [[spoiler:It's actually the ''Oerines'' who are the aliens who came to the world in The Legacy, not the Ferines! They don't need land - they live in the water after all.]] Despite that in the past, one of the Human Groups Were Bastards, but so were the other to get revenge, and in that only ''some'' were bastards. (Quite a bit of the [[spoiler:Ferines]] even want to start opening up peace talks again, once the Raging Nerifes was calmed down and replaced with the alter ego, the Quiet Nerifes, later called the Great Nerifes.)** ''VideoGame/TalesOfSymphonia'' is also full of FantasticRacism. It starts out showing half-elves, in the form of Desians (who are running human ranches all across Sylvarant) are the bastards, and the humans are the victims. But because of their treatment by the Desians, humans are bastards to half-elves. It slowly starts showing how much humans can be bastards as the party reaches the parallel world of Tethe'alla. Skip to deeper in the game, and [[spoiler:it turns out that the reason half elves are bastards is because the angels, who command the half-elves, are also bastards. And the reason the angels are bastards is because the big bad: Mithos Yggdrasil. Mithos' older sister Martel is killed by humans four thousand years before the story takes place, which in turn makes him obsessed with reviving his sister.]] And pure-blooded elves were also plenty racist to half-elves, casting them out of their HiddenElfVillage ([[spoiler:Genis and Raine]] aren't even allowed in when you first visit.)** In the same note, ''TalesOfPhantasia'' has the elves once again hating half-elves and humans. They distanced themselves from humans when they began to work on the Mana Cannon, a powerful weapon that uses up the world's mana and will cause the world tree to wither and die, and have since been living in their village, refusing contact with humans unless they have royal permission. Their exact reasons for their hatred towards half-elves is never really explained (it could be because half-elves who do not grow up among several elves do not have the same values, perhaps) but it is much more intense than their hatred towards humans. Half-elves are not permitted in the elven village, any half-elf that ''does'' enter the village will be killed, etc. Though when you return [[spoiler: in the future time, 50 years from the present,]] the leader of the elves Brambard does reveal that they are improving themselves, allowing humans to enter the village without royal decree, but half-elves are still forbidden. Then you recall that Phantasia is supposed to be a very distant sequel to [[TalesOfSymphonia Symphonia]]...* Humans in the PC game series ''AgeOfWonders'' almost always have leaders whose favorite pastimes include leveling elven forests, siding with demons and orcs for more power, and enslaving lesser races. This is despite the fact that they technically have a "Neutral" alignment.** In the sequel, however, they're mostly being manipulated by a vindictive Water Wizard.* The Therions (anthropomorphic animals, ranging from lion-men to gazelles to rhinos to panthers) of ''JeanneDArc'' deeply resent mankind, a hatred stemming from how the very humans they assisted in the Demon War turned on them and corralled them all up in a tiny warren just outside Paris (where, previous to the war, the Therion kingdom extended all over Europe.) In fact, the few Therions that assist Jeanne and her cause are a minuscule exception to the rule.* The LucasArts adventure game ''The Dig'' [[LampshadeHanging hung a lampshade]] on this issue. When one of the characters tentatively points out to a friendly alien that not all humans are as [[RousseauWasRight nice]] as they are, the alien cheerily replies that that's okay, since all relatively young species are like that, and anyone who wants to pick a fight will just be [[SufficientlyAdvancedAlien squashed like bugs]].* Dracula from ''Franchise/{{Castlevania}}'' likes to toss out this accusation to whatever Belmont he's fighting, usually starting by mentioning that the only reason he's up and about is that some human woke him again. But the Belmonts are generally full of righteous fury and in no mood for discussing the idea, so not much comes of it.-->''What is a man? A miserable little pile of secrets!''** In some games it's explicitly stated that Dracula's continuous resurrections are not just because of individual Dracula-cultists resurrecting him, but that human malice and greed in itself allows him to continuously come back even when it isn't his will to do so. This may be more AsLongAsThereIsEvil rather than an endemic thing, however.** He is also guilty of stimulating the trope. Consider the purpose of the titular ''[[VideoGame/CastlevaniaIIIDraculasCurse Dracula's Curse]]''/''[[VideoGame/CastlevaniaCurseOfDarkness Curse of Darkness]]''. Death's backstory in ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaJudgment'' outright states that he is "sowing wickedness" in human hearts to help bring Dracula back.** Dracula does have a FreudianExcuse relating to this trope, having lost at least two beloved wives to human cruelty. The death of the first to illness while he was fighting in the crusades led him to renounce his humanity and declare war on God, and the death of the second one to a witch-hunt caused him to extend that war to humanity. His reincarnation follows the same path if the player lets his girlfriend die.* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI''. The Espers lived in a lush and fertile world in peace and harmony with themselves and their surroundings despite the fact they can use their magic powers for destruction, while the humans drain the power of the Espers into delicious whiffs of magic purely for warfare and personal gain, going as far as to modify their own bodies with a sickening blend of their own technology and their magic extracts of the Espers. The two largest human cities in the game, [[WretchedHive Zozo]] and [[SceneryGorn Vector]], are also completely terrible places and both have little to no redeeming qualities within them whatsoever.* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII''. [[GeniusLoci The Planet is a living being]] that every single life form protects and loves, ''except for the vast majority of humanity''. See, humans like to dig holes to suck out the very LifeForce of the planet, mess with genetics to make monsters, and kill each other, ''in addition'' to polluting the environment around them. So, when the Planet's natural protectors (the [=WEAPONs=]) are activated to respond to the very real threat of the Planet's extinction, do they go after the EldritchAbomination that desecrates life with its very presence? No, [[GaiasVengeance they go straight after human population centers and attempt to reduce them to ashes]], in some cases succeeding, ''just to reduce the amount of human beings on the Planet''.* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII'', you can't swing a dead cat without hitting some non-human eager to remark on how power hungry we are, with a distinctly condescending and pitying tone. What nobody seems to mention is that while humans love to start their wars, they're also the only ones able to stop them, precisely ''because'' they're willing to wield power against power.** Also used with a Viera after the battle with one of the Judges in the frozen mountainside. Most of the people are injured or dead and some of the humans are begging a Viera to help them, but she refuses because she sees the humans as nothing but power hungry maniacs who kill everyone, including their own. It isn't until a few sidequests later that she sees the true good in humanity and decides to help the survivors.** The game either tries to mitigate this or is hopelessly hypocritical in that at least half of the other races (besides Viera) are not just criminals, but scum sort of criminals like slavers. And the Viera themselves are basically just a reskin of ''Enterprise'' era Vulcans in their manner.* Shows up again in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIII''. Your party spends a good chunk of the game on the run from the EvilArmy while everyone else on Cocoon hates and fears you, even little kids. The populace of Cocoon even support complete Purges of residential areas where L'Cie have been spotted due to their extreme paranoia concerning anything Pulse related. To be fair, most of them only act this way because they believe Pulse L'Cie are horrible monsters that want to destroy everything they know and love. Furthermore, [[spoiler: the Fal'Cie are the ones actively nurturing the populace's worse traits to lead them to destroy themselves]]. The only human portrayed to be a total bastard is Jil Nahbaat. [[spoiler: Dysley's a bastard too, but he's disqualified since he isn't human.]]* ''Lineage II'' also has this to an extent. While the other races are pure and beautiful children of the elements, humans [[http://www.lineage2.com/background/legends02.html were made from the corrupted remains of each]], and upon their creation, were immediately recognised as scum by everyone save their twisted creator.** This is quickly subverted in that the humans were enslaved by the other species and treated like trash for being second best at everything. Which won them the war in the end. ""So. Is it not ironic that the lowest creatures of all, the humans, ultimately attained ownership of the land? But that is the result of human will. Even the gods did not imagine that humans would ever become rulers of the earth."* B.B Hood of ''VideoGame/{{Darkstalkers}}'' fame, the only perfectly ordinary human in the entire cast of monster-people, is arguably the biggest monster of them all. The point of her character is to exemplify human evil.* In the ''StarControl'' universe humans are hardly one of the evil races, but they have had their... poor moments. They designed a race of super-intelligent clones, the Androsynth, then declared them inferior and put them into manual labor. This backfired rather spectacularly when the Androsynth, being more intelligent than your average Joe, still invented hyperspace travel before the humans, escaped, and eventually joined the Ur-Quan Hierarchy, hoping for some sweet revenge.** Oh, and humanity also managed to collectively alienate the VUX by insulting their appearance in the first contact - ironically, humans look just as attractive to the VUX as the other way around (VUX is sometimes treated as an acronym for "Very Ugly Xenoform"). This would lead to a massive political crisis and, indirectly, to the VUX joining the Ur-Quan as well as, isolated, they could not match the Hierarchy. So out of 7 races in the original Hierarchy, humankind is responsible for two. Unsurprisingly, the Alliance (which humans were members of) eventually lost the first war.*** ...And the VUX example is subverted when we learn that [[spoiler:the "won't forgive you because of [[http://wiki.uqm.stack.nl/The_Insult The Insult]]" is an excuse, but the ''real'' reason is they find us so repellant that they never even considered ''not going to war with us''.]] So really, humans may be foul-mouthed bastards, but the VUX are just {{jerkass}}es.* Subvert ed in ''VideoGame/SoulNomadAndTheWorldEaters'' with Nereids (Juno in particular). Their view on humans is more like Humans Are Untrustworthy rather than full on Humans Are The Real Monsters. An extra level of subversion kicks in as unlike many examples of this trope, they're more willing to judge on an individual basis. The ones that pass are seen as potential mates. Despite being on opposite sides, Throndyke is still respected as a good man anyway.** Played straight since according to the official site humans are largely responsible for the tradition of war and conflict on Prodesto.* Subverted and parodied (in a straight manner) in ''Elven Legacy''. The main characters, who are elves, will often (oh so often...) go on a rant about human bastardness, while at the same time acting either in equally bastardly manner or topping humans by quite a bit. Most blatant when the protagonist accuse humans of arrogance for daring to think elves would be humble enough to surrender their weapons and meet with their lord.* Humans' potential for Bastardry is the ''reason'' the Aerogaters and Inspectors attack Earth in the ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWars'' games in which they appear: The Aerogaters wish to turn us into brainwashed soldiers, while the Inspectors fear us becoming a threat, and try to keep us under control.* Most of the sentient races in ''VideoGame/GuildWars'' are pretty bastard-y in their own ways, but the Charr see the humans as this for driving them out of Ascalon more than a thousand years ago.* In the ''VideoGame/ToeJamAndEarl'' series, where humans and other earthly life aren't wantonly malicious and "unfunky", they're still ''weird.'' Friendly ones in the series include the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Wiseman in a Carrot Suit]] and the Soul Sisters -- a trio of black women who speak only in gospel song. In ''ToeJam & Earl 3'', you can convert most initially hostile Earthlings... such as chickens with army helmets and egg-firing mortars, and CreepyChild little girls with seemingly demon-possessed teddy bears. See? Weird.* A major plot point in ''VideoGame/ArcanumOfSteamworksAndMagickObscura'', where humans have triggered an industrial revolution with dwarven technology acquired by Arcanum's richest businessman [[MeaningfulName Gilbert Bates]]. As a result, the Forest of Morbihan has been transformed into the Morbihan Plain over a few short years, and the most industrialized city, Tarant, is also one of the most polluted. Members of other races such as [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame dwarves]] and [[OurElvesAreBetter elves]] theorize that because humans have relatively short livespans, every action they take is motivated by the fear of their impending deaths, and they do not live long enough to see the consequences of their actions.* Revealed in one dialogue during ''VideoGame/MegaManZero 3'', stating that humans of the dystopian Neo Arcadia only indulge themselves in food and comfort, letting the authorities do the thinking for them while regarding the conflicts [[TheHero Zero]] and [[BigGood Ciel]] have been fighting as mere daily news on the televisions. In ''Z4'', Zero also further condemns humans fleeing from [[BigBad Weil's]] iron fist as cowardly beings who would do nothing about their refugee leader getting kidnapped just to avoid another war. It is not until [[TheDragon Craft]] blows up the city do humans finally wake up with terrible pain in their minds.** Dr. Weil also implies in Zero 3 that Humans innately feel that ruling all the eye can see and making others work for them is the ultimate joy for them, and believes that no Reploid could ever understand this joy, although Zero [[KirkSummation counters]] this by stating that he doubts any decent human would understand Weil's viewpoint, either.* VideoGame/{{Prototype}}. The story is about a [[TheVirus viral infestation]] that threatens Manhatten and potentially the world. The citizens' only "hope" is Blackwatch, an ''army'' of bastards who kill both infected and healthy people. You later learn that your character [[spoiler: is not really Alex Mercer. The real Alex unleashed the Blacklight Virus out of pure spite and died before the game began. The Alex we know is actually a personification of the Virus itself that copied Alex's genetic makeup. The Virus is absolutely ''disgusted'' that ''it's own creator let it loose on the world'' and spends the entire game essentially trying to save the world from it's own infestation and is even willing to sacrifice itself for the planet. When the EldritchAbomination who was created specifically to destroy the world ends up being the most sympathetic and heroic character in the game, you ''know'' Humans Are The Real Monsters.]]** In the [[VideoGame/{{Prototype2}} sequel]], Mercer's growing disgust with humanity's flaws [[spoiler:drives him to become a DarkMessiah bent on uniting the entire world into a HiveMind so he can end all conflict.]]* Casually tossed here and there in ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising''. Palutena notes, when talking about Magnus, that humans are fundamentally driven by desire, using the mercenary as an example. [[spoiler:Hades gets humans to go to war with themselves to an insane degree by spreading the rumor of the Wish Seed. This draws the ire of the nature goddess Viridi, who begins attempting to annihilate humankind for their greed, violence, and wastefulness.]] It's ultimately subverted in that the other sentient race, the gods, are shown to be just as bad, if not worse.* How humans in the ''Franchise/MassEffect'' universe may be seen by the other races. Within 30 years, humanity has rapidly expanded and forced our way to the top of the galactic government which has existed since we were in our bronze age.** Some of the human factions and characters easily qualify as this, especially Cerberus.** Inverted in the sequels. In ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'', [[spoiler:it's revealed that despite the fact that a Reaper attacked the in-universe equivalent of the U.N. headquarters, the Council refuses to take any steps towards preparing for the imminent Reaper invasion. Cue Shepard going 'rogue' and working with Cerberus.]] In ''Mass Effect 3'' this is taken even further. [[spoiler:It's revealed that the Salarians DID take Shepard's warnings seriously but not seriously enough to push the Council into action. The Turians only took Shepard's warning seriously after the invasion began and, assuming he survived the events of ''Mass Effect 2'', recruit Garrus as a 'Reaper expert'. The Asari not only ignored Shepard's warnings, its revealed that they were concealing a fully operational Prothean data beacon not only capable of warning about the Reaper threat but containing vital information to building a weapon that could defeat the Reapers. AND this is on top of the fact that the Asari have effectively ruled the galaxy for centuries, which one of your teammates will point out. To add insult to injury, this is the same galaxy ruling species that passed laws forbidding withholding Prothean technology.]]*** It should be pointed out that both HumansAreTheRealMonsters and HumansAreBastards in addition applies nonetheless if you choose the Renegade path at the end of ''VideoGame/MassEffect1'', what with [[spoiler:ordering the human fleets to stand back at first, and thereby sacrificing the Destiny Ascension, which was evacuating the Citadel Council, and thus, the entire Council in cold blood. The intra-human "bastard" part comes in the form of the new Council, now headed by a human, still not giving a damn about Shepard's warnings (that the human Councilor is the JerkAss and, later, Cerberus sympathizer Udina probably is a factor). But basically, it depends on play style - a full Renegade playthrough will hammer home just what kind of monsters and bastards humans are, while in a Paragon playthrough, things are looking much nicer.]]* The villains of the Orochi Saga in ''VideoGame/TheKingOfFighters'', namely the aforementioned {{Orochi}} and his followers, strongly believe this. To them, humans have ruined their world&the environment, though aside from that, they don't consider them all that great in general, to the point where they believe humankind should be annihilated. (Though part of this may also be that they serve a higher power, 'Gaia', but regardless of whether or not they're being influenced, this is still what they believe.) The Edit-Team ending even outright states that while Orochi still needed to be stopped, humanity still wasn't that great either, and that we were partially to blame for Orochi's purpose being twisted into what it became. Still, some of our heroes (as in, the various teams,) acknowledge this to an extent, though they don't think that humanity is completely un-redeemable.* Another work of SNK's, ''VideoGame/TheLastBlade'' (technically set in the same universe, but in the 1860's in Japan), has a similar villain. Kagami is one of four individuals that were gifted with powers by the four Japanese Gods, with Kagami representing the phoenix, but with time, Kagami grew disgusted with humanity, and with that belief in mind, got to work opening the Hell Gate, with the intention to suck Earth into Hell. In the sequel however, he's reborn, (after being sucked into Hell's Gate in the first game,) and by the end, after being forced by the God's into service once more, decides to personally give humanity a second chance.* Being in a CrapsackWorld, everyone everywhere in ''VideoGame/TheWitcher'' could be called a monster, whether its humans for oppressing nonhumans, elves for creating their own terrorist army that kills civilians and steals from hospitals to fight this oppression, or witchers themselves for taking just about any job if it pays since the decline of the monster population they were originally built to fight. However, the end of the game sums it up pretty well [[spoiler: when Geralt is about to kill the BigBad Jacques De Aldersberg with his silver witcher's sword after Jacques knocks away his steel one with magic. Jacques protests saying, "But... that sword... it's for monsters." Geralt's response is to silently stab him in the throat with it.]] While the witchers' silver swords are more suited for killing supernatural creatures and their steel swords more suited for killing humans, Geralt believes that "both are for monsters."** The first quest of the game shows that regular, unassuming people can be just as bad as the murderers and zealots. The town guard who is mourning the beautiful young woman who passed away? [[spoiler:It's implied that she took her own life because he raped her]]. The fat merchant living on the outskirts of the village? [[spoiler:It's implied he murdered his own brother to get his coin]]. The kindly young witch who helps you through the quest? [[spoiler:She's actually a devotee of a psychotic death cult]]. Depending on who you ask, [[spoiler:either one could be directly responsible for The Beast haunting the village]].* The backstory for ''VideoGame/{{Paladog}}'' has humans filling the world with so much evil that the gods are forced to destroy the world and create a new one with critters as the dominant species. Under the rule of the critters, the world becomes a utopia almost entirely devoid of violence... until TheLegionsOfHell invade it because they couldn't manipulate the crittier's minds like they could humans.* In ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'', humans have done some terrible things. Currently, many elves are former slaves who still have second-class citizen status and lives in city slums. Their Dalish cousins are forced to constantly live a gypsy-like lifestyle and move their camps every few months or so. They still remember their old civilization, which was wiped out by KnightTemplar humans because the elves refused to worship Andraste. Subverted in that the elves also had their bastard moments, such as their first civilization trying to conquer humans. Then there's the Tevinter Imperium, where the ruling magisters can do whatever they please.** In ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'', due to continuing mistreatment by overzealous Templars, many Mages are forced to resort to BloodMagic to either try to escape or simply protect themselves. However, this only creates a vicious circle as the Templars use this as proof that they need to tighten their choke-hold over the Mages. Eventually, the events at the endgame push the Mages too far, causing every Circle in Thedas to rise up and [[ThisMeansWar declare all-out War!]]** Also, Darkspawn.-->'''Sebastian''': "What do the Dalish teach about the creation of the darkspawn? I mean the Chant of Light says it was the hubris of magisters trying to compete with the Maker. But you don't believe in the Chant of Light...or the Maker. What do you believe?"-->'''Merrill''': "Well, we don't get into many details but we're pretty sure it's the humans' fault."** ''Videogame/DragonAgeInquisition'' reveals in its latter half that [[spoiler:humans had little if anything to do with the destruction of the Elven empire. The Elven empire was brought down by CivilWar.]]* Shows up as graffiti in the "Dead Air" campaign of ''VideoGame/Left4Dead'' ("WE ARE THE REAL MONSTERS!"). Also mocked right after ("Have you been outside JACKASS!!"). They really miss the internet.** Shows up again in "The Passing", as a piece of commentary on bathroom graffiti. "I flushed it 50 times and now it DOESN'T WORK!","You IDIOT! YOU ARE THE REAL MONSTER"* ''VideoGame/{{Borderlands 2}}''** GentlemanAdventurer Sir Hammerlock asks you to investigate why the giant Crystalisks (giant tripedal rock-like creatures with [[AttackItsWeakPoint crystalline formations on their legs]]) have become so violent, when they were previously quite docile. It turns out that the Crystalisks did not particularly appreciate having their crystals "mined" off of them by workers from the Dahl Corporation, since without those crystals, the Crystalisk dies. [[ChainReactionDestruction In a prolonged and explosive manner]]. As the Crystalisks are [[NighInvulnerable highly resilient]] to small arms fire, things get [[CurbStompBattle very messy]] for Dahl, and the Crystalisks now regard just about ''anything'' as a potential threat to be exterminated with extreme prejudice.--->'''Sir Hammerlock:''' Have you heard my speech about how [[DiscussedTrope humans are the real monsters]]? Seems appropriate.** To twist the knife, you hear one sympathetic Dahl employee's ECHO where she plays with [[AndCallHimGeorge Blue]] (A [[AttackOfThe50FootWhatever rather large Crystalisk]]) with her hat telling Blue to wait a moment. She ends up getting killed by her boss when she tries to defend them.--->'''Chief:''' ''[growls heard in background]'' BLUE! Not now. Here, go play with my hat. ''[laughs]'' There you go, Blue! Oh yeah we met a large one down here. She's very friendly. We call her Blue because... ''[clears throat]'' ...yeah.** Oh, not feeling the knife yet? How about the fact that the very same Blue is the mandatory boss-fight for Marcus's "Safe and Sound" quest? Meaning you have to ''kill'' Blue to get back Marcus's precious safe [[spoiler: full of lewd photos of Moxxi]].* While the {{Tron}} movies centered on AIIsACrapshoot, ''[[VideoGame/TronTwoPointOh Tron 2.0]]'' went this route instead. The Programs were just trying to carry out their functions and mind their business when a small group of insanely greedy humans decided they liked the idea of [[AGodAmI virtual godhood]] a bit too much, and planned to conquer the digital world with an army of mercenaries, enslave the Programs, and rule the world from the shadows by blackmailing world leaders and manipulating global finance and media. -->'''Mercury''' (a Program): ''This is no place for a User. We're too crude and rudimentary.''-->'''Jet''': ''If anyone's crude, it's'' us, ''[[TheWorldIsNotReady we're not ready to exist here.]] Not yet, anyway.''* In ''VideoGame/FTLFasterThanLight'', you'll encounter any number of aliens with unique abilties trying to kill you--the [[BloodKnight Mantises]], the [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder Slugs]], and the [[ProudWarriorRaceGuys Rockmen]] are three especially vicious species. Even the [[EnergyBeing Zoltans]] will get pretty uppity over laws in their territories, and the generally-peaceful [[AmbiguousRobot Engi]] can and will engage you in combat if they believe you to be trouble to them and their creations. But the Rebel faction that's out to destroy TheFederation? It's comprised of ''humans''. Yes, the same species described as being [[PunyEarthlings boring]] [[MasterOfNone and]] [[HumansAreAverage average]] have amassed to big enough numbers and developed a strong enough fleet to pose a fatal threat to the Federation, and possess the single strongest ship in the entire game, the [[FinalBoss Rebel Flagship]].* Played with in ''EccoTheDolphin: Defender of the Future''. When dolphins are made into non-sapient creatures by [[ItMakesSenseInContext aliens stealing their ancestors' noble traits]], humans take over the world, uplift dolphins, and immediately enslave and abuse them. However, when time travel causes the dolphins' ancestors to reattain sapience without the traits that make them kind, ''they'' take over the world and drive humans from the seas and probably to extinction, after which they abuse and enslave each other and whales. The takeaway message seems to be less ''Humans'' Are the Real Monsters and more ''Unchecked Dominant Species'' Are the Real Monsters - things only go well when humans and dolphins start a joint society as humble equals.* {{Discussed|Trope}} frequently in ''VideoGame/TheLastOfUs'', where Joel has to face both infected humans and factions of barbaric humans. [[spoiler:Especially so during the prologue; set during the outbreak of the infection, it ends when Joel's daughter is surprisingly killed by a soldier with shoot-to-kill orders.]]-->'''Bill''': ''Ya know, as bad as [the infected] are, at least they're predictable.''* ''VideoGame/BeyondTwoSouls''. Meet Jodie, a girl who can talk to spirits, and has a spirit attached to her. She is also suicidally depressed. Why? Because for most of her life starting from ''birth'', the 99% of the humans she met either treated her like shit (her own ''father'' called her a monster in front of her, and that's ignoring the teens who threw her into a closet and called her a witch) or wanted to use her powers for their own selfish desires ("You will use your powers for our organization, Jodie!" or "Use your powers so I can talk to my dead relatives, Jodie!") There are, shockingly, very few people in the game that actually treated her just like anyone else, without being cruel to her, or planning to exploit her for her powers.* ''VideoGame/MetalGearRisingRevengeance'': The [[RidiculouslyHumanRobot Ridiculously Wolf-Like Robot]] Bladewolf holds this view. He doesn't hate humans, at least not openly, but he does suggest that the reason the military project that made him was cancelled because he lacked the killing instinct and brutality that human soldiers possessed. Raiden does not disagree. This is quite a swerve in tone, as the ''Franchise/MetalGear'' series has pretty much always held the belief that RousseauWasRight; no matter how depraved or batshit insane the villain seemed, they always had a [[FreudianExcuse tragic backstory that made them that way]], or were a WellIntentionedExtremist [[note]]Examples: [[MadBomber Fatman]]? He was bullied all his life until the only person he cared about was his bomb disposal instructor. [[MagnificentBastard Ocelot]]? All the shit he does is done all out of love for the Big Boss. [[AxCrazy Psycho Mantis]]? [[AMindIsATerribleThingToRead He found out that his own father loathed him after reading his mind]], and then his mind got "infected" by that of a serial killer, causing him to adopt a murderously psychotic personality. The whole [[DarkActionGirl Beauty and the Beast]] unit? They were all [[BreakTheCutie driven mad]] by the [[WarIsHell horrors of warfare]], and their back stories are noted in-universe for being especially tragic. The only truly evil villains in the whole series were Volgin, Sundowner and [[spoiler:Armstrong]].[[/note]].* In ''VideoGame/{{Dishonored}}'', The Outsider makes more than one comment that strongly implies that he believes the "nature of man" to be cruel and corrupt. A nonlethal Corvo seems to incite his curiosity precisely because of this: Corvo is choosing, of his own free will, to act in complete opposition to everything the Outsider believes humans to be. The only time the Outsider is ever shown to be genuinely taken aback is if [[spoiler:Corvo chooses to spare Daud]]. Regardless, it doesn't seem to change his opinion or even make him reconsider; rather, he indicates that he sees Corvo as the exception that proves the rule.* In the ''Videogame/DarkSouls'' DownloadableContent "Artorias of the Abyss", Hawkeye Gough and Lord's Blade Ciaran aren't terribly impressed with humanity. If the player chooses to attack them, they aren't surprised since they expected no better from humans. Even more telling, the most evil and vicious ''thing'' in the game [[spoiler:is a human who has let his fraction of the Dark Soul, aka humanity itself, go out of control, turning him and the entire population of Oolacile into monsters.]] It's stated that if the Age of Fire ends, the Age of Dark will come, but apparently [[spoiler:given that humans ''are'' Darkness, the Age of Dark would be a golden age for humanity... and this is not presented as a good thing.]]* The ''VideoGame/DeadRising'' franchise has this a lot, as the bosses are all human and most are either insane or exhibit the worst qualities of humanity. In ''VideoGame/DeadRising2: Off the Record'', Chuck Greene points out that zombies are so mindless, weak, and [[ZombieGait slow]] that defeating them should be child's play, but whenever an outbreak or other disaster happens, people give in to their greed, fear, etc and turn on each other.* Said word-for-word by Double in ''VideoGame/{{Skullgirls}}'', as she is a herald to the Trinity, who created the Skullheart solely to prove this trope. Also played with on the fact that [[AFormYouAreComfortableWith her base form]] is a ''[[NunsAreSpooky nun.]]''* In ''VideoGame/MiniRobotWars'', it's revealed that Star Travel Inc., the ones behind the [[KillerRobot evil Machines']] invasion of the Minirobots' Green Planet, are humans who lost the "Blue Planet" due to their neglect.----